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Erich Muller, as he was commonly known, was born to parents John and Dawn Muller and raised in the Kansas City, Missouri area with older brothers Johhny and Mark.[2] He expressed an interest in radio and the entertainment industry as a whole from an early age. As a child he would listen to old reel-to-reel tapes of classic radio shows like The Shadow and The Stan Freberg Show with his father.[2] Erich Muller soon found work as a model and child actor, working in regional print and television commercials as well as Kansas City theater productions. Among his print modeling work were ads for Lee jeans and Wal-Mart.[3]

As a youth he appeared in over 100 stage performances, with one notable long-running role being that of Billy Ray, Jr. in the play On Golden Pond.[2] During one performance of the play legendary actor Henry Fonda was in the audience, and would later go on to play the lead character Norman in the film version.[4] Erich Muller attended multiple schools in the Kansas City area, including Blue Ridge Christian School. In his book Dad, Dames, Demons, and a Dwarf: My Trip Down Freedom Road, he recounts an incident in fifth grade where in an act of corporal punishment he was severely beaten with a board by the school principal, an event that changed his outlook on organized religion.[2] Muller transferred to the suburban Harrisonville school district, where he graduated high school.[3]

Following high school Erich Muller attended college at Central Missouri State University (now University of Central Missouri) in Warrensburg, not far from the Kansas City metropolitan area.[4] At CMSU he continued to work in theater, and it was his role as a half-man, half-animal in one production that gave rise to his nickname "Mancow".[4] Muller would earn double degrees from the university in Public Relations and Theatre in 1990.[4] To earn extra cash while in school he operated his own mobile DJ business, providing music for school dances, weddings, class reunions and the like, a job he later said he hated.[2] It was also while in college he took his first tentative steps into the world of broadcasting.

Muller's radio career began while he was still in college. He got a job at KOKO-AM in Warrensburg as a late night control board operator, playing local commercials during satellite broadcasts of The Larry King Show.[4] His role at the station gradually expanded until he got his own afternoon show. Among Muller's fans was the general manager of KLSI-FM, Kansas City, who offered him a full-time job as head of station promotions. Muller accepted the position, plus a weekend air shift, while completing his final semester at Central Missouri State. After graduation in 1990 Muller was hired as the morning drive air talent at Kansas City's KBEQ-FM, Q-104, where the Holy Moley & Maxx Show quickly rose to #1 in the ratings and helped Q-104 dominate the market.[4]

After his early hometown success, Muller left Kansas City for a brief stint at KDON-FM in Monterey, California. Soon though Muller headed north to San Francisco and KYLD-FM, "Wild 107". Now going by his old college nickname Mancow, in 1993 Muller made national headlines with a publicity stunt that caused a major traffic headache for the City by the Bay. Reacting to a story that President Bill Clinton tied up air traffic at Los Angeles International Airport for over an hour while getting a haircut from celebrity hairstylist Cristophe on Air Force One, Muller staged a parody of the incident on the San Francisco – Oakland Bay Bridge during rush hour. He used vans to block the westbound lanes on the bridge while his then sidekick, Jesus "Chuy" Gomez, got a haircut.[4] As a result of the publicity stunt, Muller was charged with creating a public nuisance. He entered a no contest plea; his sentence included three years probation, a $500 fine and 100 hours of community service. The radio station settled a civil suit by paying $1.5 million, including $500,000 to cover three toll-free days on the bridge.[5][6]

Muller accepted a job offer by Evergreen Media President Jim de Castro at more than double his salary to move to Chicago and work at WWBZ-FM, "The Blaze". "The Blaze" was renamed to "Rock 103.5" (WRCX-FM), and created his radio show, Mancow's Morning Madhouse, which debuted in July 1994.

Within two Arbitron ratings periods he took the station's 19th-ranked morning show to No. 5 among all teens and adults, and No. 1 among 18- to 34-year-olds. During his run on Q101 Mancow had a much publicized feud with fellow "shock-jock" Howard Stern.[7] He also had close on and off air relationships with "Crazy Howard" McGee of WGCI and Mike North of WSCR. McGee and Mancow's shows ran at the same time but catered to different demographics (WGCI is an R&B and hip hop station) and in 2000 Mancow pulled an April Fool's day prank on his pal by switching his transmitter with that of Urban station WGCI causing McGee to unknowingly broadcast on Q101's frequency while Mancow introduced himself as the "White Czar" and taunted McGee on his own station, causing a barrage of calls from gullible listeners in McGee's defense. McGee was confused as he took many of the calls, but did not realize for over an hour that he was the butt of a joke. After realizing the prank, McGee played along for the remainder of the segment.[8]

Muller's "Mancow's Morning Madhouse" ended its live run on Emmis' Alternative outlet in Spring 2006, and had the highest rated audience in Chicago with Men Ages 25 to 54 (among English speaking stations). According to Arbitron, a radio ratings service, Mancow's show, measured in Average Quarter Hour listening percentages (AQH) had a 5.7 Share. The next closest station was all-news WBBM with a 5.3 Share.

In his target demographic, men between the ages of 18 and 34 years, Mancow AQH was an 11.8 Share of the audience in that age group, the highest Share of any other English-speaking station in Chicago.[citation needed]

His show, however, was not without controversy. In 1999, Janet Dahl, the wife of Chicago talk radio host Steve Dahl, filed a multi-million dollar lawsuit against Muller over lewd comments Muller made about her on his show. In 2001, the case was settled out of court. Although the terms of the deal were not disclosed, it reportedly reached seven figures.[9]

Between 1999 and 2004, David Edward Smith's Citizens for Community Values filed 66 indecency complaints with the FCC relating to Muller's program, leading to 6 citations and $42,000 in fines. In 2004 Muller sued Smith for harassment and business interference, but later dropped the lawsuit.[10][11] Emmis Communications entered into a 2004 consent decree with the FCC, agreeing to make a $300,000 "voluntary payment" to resolve the complaints; in 2006 (after Muller had ended his WKQX show), the FCC rejected Smith's challenge to this settlement.[12]

For a full week leading up to Limp Bizkit's Summer Sanitarium 2003 concert in Chicago, Muller continually mocked the band's vocalist Fred Durst on his radio show[13] and invited listeners to attend the concert with anti-Durst placards.[14] When Muller's fans complied by showing up with the placards, openly taunting the singer, booing him and pelting him with refuse, Durst erupted into a profanity-laced homophobic tirade and left the stage only 17 minutes into the show. Durst was eventually sued for breach of contract (for not completing the show) by Chicago lawyer Michael Young in a class-action suit.[15]

On October 22, 2008, WLS in Chicago announced that Muller, along with Pat Cassidy, would join that station as a weekday radio talk show host, in the 9 am to 11 am time slot, beginning on October 27, 2008. Muller continued to host his nationally syndicated morning radio program.[16] Just four months after the debut of Mancow and Cassidy, Arbitron ratings had the show at No. 1 in the 12+ audience, and nearly doubling Chicago competitors in the male demographic as of February 2009.[17] Despite the ratings, Muller was fired from his job on news and conservative talk station WLS-AM after only 16 months.[18] Muller then hosted a Sunday night show on WABC-AM from September 2010 until October 2011, when he was let go following Cumulus Media's acquisition of WABC-AM parent Citadel Broadcasting.[19]

On October 22, 2012, Muller began his new show, simply titled Mancow, on WPWR-TV, a live broadcast of his current radio show "The Mancow Experience," with co-host Teresa Cesario. In February 2013, a program called "The Mancow Mashup" began airing on the network, which was a half-hour program that showed highlights from the previous morning's Television show.

This show's last airing was October 7th, 2014. [20] On October 9, 2014, roughly a year from when the show began airing, Muller's WPWR-TV simulcast of his radio show was confirmed cancelled after the show's contract expired, along with "The Mancow Mashup." Extremely low ratings (often comparative to morning infomercial ratings) were cited as the contributing factor to the cancellation. Muller confirmed that for the first time since 1985, he will be taking a break from both TV and radio. However, Muller did mention the possibility of other ventures, one of them being the potential of a movie review show.[21][22]

On February 23, Muller returned to the radio on Chicago's 97.7FM "The Loop" radio station for a week-long audition for the station's 6-10AM weekday show.[23]

On November 20, 2005, Ray Hofstatter, aka, "Cowboy Ray", a 45-year-old mentally challenged frequent caller and guest on Mancow's Morning Madhouse was struck by a car in a hit-and-run accident and critically injured.[24][25] Ray died shortly after his life support was terminated on January 11, 2006.[26] Muller offered a $13,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the driver,[26] but was unsuccessful. The hit-and-run case of Cowboy Ray was featured on Fox's America's Most Wanted television show on February 25, 2006.[27] As of September 2013, the driver responsible had still not been found.

On May 22, 2009, Muller had himself waterboarded during his radio program on WLS-AM,[28] having lost a listener poll determining whether he or co-host Pat Cassidy would be the one waterboarded. The talk show host had previously claimed that calling waterboarding "torture" was wrong, something he had stated that he hoped his reenactment would prove.[29] Lasting only 6 seconds ("8 seconds less than the average person", according to program guest Marine Sergeant Klay South), Mancow afterward changed his opinion, saying, "It is way worse than I thought it would be, and that's no joke", and described waterboarding as "absolutely torture".[28][30]

Questions were later raised about the validity of the procedure. South had no formal training in waterboarding and had never before performed the procedure, leading the online celebrity and gossip site Gawker to accuse Muller of faking the whole thing.[31][32] Muller later stated in an interview on Countdown with Keith Olbermann, "I admit it, it was a stupid radio stunt. But waterboarding, all it is, is water in your nose and mouth with your head back." Further adding "We went into this thinking it was going to be a joke. But it was not a joke – it was horrible. 'Hoax' is probably not the right word, but we did think it was going to be a joke."[33][34]

In a November 2013 appearance on the The Alex Jones Show, Muller claimed that Chicago actor Harry Lennix had been hired to train Barack Obama how to look and act presidential more than a decade before Obama was elected president in an attempt to support claims that President Obama is nothing more than a "puppet" being controlled by shadowy figures who groomed him for office so that he could promote their secret agenda. According to Muller, Lennix told him that, "He was the actor hired to teach Obama to be Harry Lennix, watch The Blacklist and you can see Obama, this is an actor that we hired to be our president." Muller also told Alex Jones, "He (Lennix) is leaving our studio and sees a cut-out of Obama and says ‘he’s a rat bastard’ – oh because I’m black I have to like Obama? He says, Mancow do I remind you of him? Barack Obama is me, you’ve seen me on TV, you’ve seen me on movies, he is me." [35] However, Lennix has reportedly said Muller's claims are nothing more than hearsay and stated that "Those are not my words," and "I don’t like Barack Obama or his policies but I never said I trained him or anything of the kind." [36]

Erich Mancow Muller married Sandy Ferrando, a former publicist on February 14, 2003. He has twin daughters named Ava Grace and Isabella Sofia. His father, a former traveling salesman, died of cancer at age 62. The event deeply affected Muller and in part prompted him to write his first book, Dad, Dames, Demons and a Dwarf.[2] Muller is a business partner with his older brother Mark in "Max Motors" a car dealership about 65 miles south of Kansas City, Missouri in the small town of Butler as well as several other business enterprises.[37] On February 24, 2009, Muller appeared on the Trinity Broadcasting Network show "Praise the Lord" to talk about his Christian faith.